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15 - Self as Sample

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2010

Joachim I. Krueger
Affiliation:
Brown University
Melissa Acevedo
Affiliation:
Brown University
Jordan M. Robbins
Affiliation:
Brown University
Klaus Fiedler
Affiliation:
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany
Peter Juslin
Affiliation:
Umeå Universitet, Sweden
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Summary

The popular imagination owes many stimulating images to the science fiction series Star Trek. Among the more disturbing ones are the Borg, an alien life form operating “under a collective consciousness, whereby the thoughts of each drone are interconnected with all others in what is referred to as the' Hive Mind,' eliminating any sense of individuality.” The image of the Borg evokes familiar human concerns. For decades, sociologists and social psychologists sought to understand the psychology of the masses or crowds. Crowds came to be feared both for what they could do to others (e.g., lynch them) and for what they could do to the people within them (e.g., lead them toward self-destruction). Members of crowds were thought to be depersonalized as a result of the homogenization of their thoughts and behaviors (Le Bon, 1895).

In modern parlance, the idea that crowds have minds of their own is an argument regarding an emergent property. Emergent properties are irreducible; they cannot be understood with reference to the properties of their constituent elements. Social scientists studying crowds would be wasting their time trying to understand the behavior of the collective from the behavior of a sample of individuals. Nonetheless, this is what F. H. Allport (1924) proposed. He suggested that the analysis of collective behavior should begin with an analysis of individual behavior because “the individual in the crowd behaves just like he would behave alone, only more so” (p. 295, emphasis in the original).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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